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Bring new life to your old Apple computer!

Floppy Emu is a floppy and hard disk emulator for classic Apple II, Macintosh, and Lisa computers. It uses an SD memory card and custom hardware to mimic an Apple floppy disk and drive, or an Apple hard drive. The Emu behaves exactly like a real disk drive, requiring no special software or drivers.

Bring new life to your old Apple computer! Floppy Emu is a specialized floppy and hard disk emulator for classic Apple computers. It uses a removable SD memory card and custom hardware to mimic an Apple floppy disk and drive, or an Apple hard drive. The Emu behaves exactly like a real disk drive, requiring no special software or drivers.

Floppy Emu is perfect for booting your favorite games, transferring files from vintage to modern machines, and troubleshooting a computer without a working OS. Just plug in the Emu board, and you’ll be up and running in seconds.

BMOW Floppy Emu Deluxe Bundle

Floppy Emu Model B

Frosted Ice Acrylic Case (requires assembly)

Vintage Apple Software Collection SD Card

Full-Size SD Adapter

Disk Extension Cable

Everything for $139

BMOW Floppy Emu Deluxe Bundle

Floppy Emu Model B

Frosted Ice Acrylic Case (requires assembly)

Vintage Apple Software Collection SD Card

Full-Size SD Adapter

Disk Extension Cable

Everything for $139

Other Purchasing Options

More InfoFloppy Emu Deluxe Bundle with Snow White Case, $139Same as the standard Deluxe Bundle, but with a Snow White case rather than the standard case, and styled like a miniature external floppy drive.More Info

More InfoApple Disk Drive A/B Switch and Cable, $16For the Lisa or Macs without an external floppy port. Makes it possible to attach a Floppy Emu and a real floppy drive at the same time, and select between them with a switch. Includes a 3 foot 20-pin ribbon cable.More Info

Macintosh Floppy – Supports 400K, 800K, and 1.4MB floppy disk images, in raw .dsk or Disk Copy 4.2 format. Disk image files are the same format as those used with popular software-based Mac emulators like Mini vMac. Compatible with the original Mac 128K through the Mac II series and Power Mac.

Apple II Hard Disk – Emulates up to four simultaneous Smartport hard disks, each up to 32 MB (when formatted as ProDOS) or 2 GB (when formatted as HFS). Smartport disks are compatible with the Apple IIgs, Apple IIc (ROM version 0 or newer), Apple IIc+, and Apple II+ or IIe with a Liron disk controller card.

Apple II Floppy – Emulates 5.25 inch 140K floppy disks on any Apple II series system, as well as 3.5 inch 800K floppies on the Apple IIgs and Apple IIc+. Disk image files may be in .DSK, .DO, .PO, .NIB, or .2MG formats. Disk images are compatible with common Apple II emulation tools such as AppleWin and Ciderpress.

Connects to the built-in 19-pin disk connector on the IIgs and IIc, or to the disk controller card on the Apple II, II+, and IIe. Compatible with the Disk 5.25 Controller Card with 19-pin connector, and the classic Disk II Controller Card with two 20-pin connectors. See the instruction manual for details on drive numbering and boot priority.

Does this require a special driver or INIT?No software is required for floppy emulation on any system. For Macintosh HD20 hard disk emulation, most supported Mac models require no software, though the Mac 512K requires Apple’s HD20 Init.

What types of disk image files are supported? Macintosh: 400K, 800K, or 1.4MB floppy disk images in raw .dsk format or DiskCopy 4.2 .image format, or hard disk images up to 2GB in raw format. Lisa: 400K or 800K floppy disk images in DiskCopy 4.2 format. Apple II: 140K floppy disk images in .DSK, .DO, .PO, .NIB, or .2MG format, 800K floppy disk images in the same formats as well as DiskCopy 4.2 format, or hard disk images up to 2 GB in .PO, .2MG, or .HDV format. The maximum size of a ProDOS volume is 32 MB, so larger hard disk images must be formatted as HFS.

Can I write to the emulated disk, as well as read from it? Yes, for all but Apple II .NIB format images. Note that writing to a DiskCopy 4.2 disk image does not modify its stored checksums – see details in the usage instructions.

Can I format the emulated disk? Yes for hard disk emulation, no for floppy emulation. Floppy Emu emulates standard sector-by-sector floppy writing, as occurs with normal I/O operations such as copying files or saving data from within a program. Instead of formatting a blank disk, use one of the provided blank disk images.

Can I back-up old floppies using tools like Disk Copy 4.2 or Copy II Plus? Yes, with some conditions. Many disk copy programs perform a simultaneous format-and-write of the destination floppy, which creates problems (see previous answer about formatting), and requires special attention when copying. See the manual for details.

Can the Emu work with copy-protected disks? The hardware is designed to work with unprotected disks using standard sector and disk formats. Some copy-protection schemes may work, including some Apple II .NIB disk images, but this isn’t a cracking tool.

Can I emulate multiple floppies at once? Floppy Emu can store as many disk image files as your SD card will hold, but only one can be “inserted” in the drive at any given time.

Can I connect two Floppy Emus to the same computer? Yes, if they are connected to separate disk ports. For the Apple II, a Floppy Emu board can also be placed at the end of a daisy chain of other disk drives. The Emu doesn’t have a daisy-chain output port, and can’t be daisy-chained on the Lisa or Macintosh.

How can I copy documents from an old Apple II or Mac floppy to a modern PC?Use Floppy Emu to copy the documents to a blank disk image, then put the SD card in your PC and use a disk image utility program like CiderPress or HFVExplorer to open the disk image and retrieve the files. See the manual for details.

305 Comments so far

A device like this is desperately needed. There must be thousands of old Mac enthusiasts stuck with no good way to bridge internet disk images downloaded to PCs to their old Apple systems. I’d buy one from you in 2 seconds. It’d pay for at least some of your mortgage 🙂

Whoah, this is really cool! I have recently acquired a Macintosh SE and was hoping to get it working after hearing its HDD make unhappy noises. I saw the HxC floppy emulator a while back but I was disappointed to find out that it would never work with my old Mac. Your project has given me hope, though! I’ve subscribed to your blog’s feed and I hope to eventually build one of these floppy emulators, too.

Thank you, and keep up the good work!

Gali September 25th, 2012
11:53 pm

Absolutely amazed with your project. Congratulations.

As the other comments mentioned, is a vital addon in case of old machines like mine, with the floppy unit out of order.

Keep us posted!

Kind regards from Madrid!

Wayne December 16th, 2012
10:40 am

Interesting
Wonder if this would word with an Apple IIgs?
If not directly then maybe coupled with a daisy-chain board?

Akis January 28th, 2014
2:06 pm

Hello!
Could you also implement support for Roland’s Quick Disks?
It’s not floppy protocol but it should be easier than that and has a huge target group as nobody has already done it till now and there are many instruments using them and no disk’s to buy..

I’m afraid not. From the limited information available about Quick Disks, it looks like it has a completely different data cabling and data format.

Francis February 13th, 2014
4:14 am

Hi Steve

Just to let you know that I received your floppy emu and I have to say it works like a charm! Thank you for the quick delivery to Gibraltar.

Best regards

Francis

A very happy customer 🙂

Jeremy February 24th, 2014
4:15 am

What would be an amazing (and probably easily-implementable) feature for this device would be Apple HD20 emulation.

For those who aren’t aware, the HD20 was a hard drive that connected to the Mac Plus via the external floppy port. The Mac Plus was released with a draft SCSI implementation, and as a result it can sometimes be tricky to get SCSI drives to play nice with it– mine only likes one specific 40MB drive combined with one specific enclosure. The HD20 always works (slowly), but it’s rare, expensive, pushing 30 years old, and uses a hard drive with a completely proprietary interface (not SASI, SCSI, MFM/RLL, IDE, or anything else.)

Just received my Mac Floppy Emu. Works great on my Mac SE/30. I’d be very interested in getting this to work on an Apple II, such as the Apple IIgs or IIc Plus. I tried it on both, but can’t get it to be recognized. I’d be more than happy to help out in getting this drive to work on the Apple II. I also have an Apple Lisa 2, so I can also help out in testing on that system.

Wayne Stewart March 15th, 2014
6:28 am

Bryan, with the Apple IIs, was the Mac Floppy Emu in a external drive box with a daisy-chain port?

Some people on the 68kmla forum had partial success getting it to work on an Apple IIgs. See http://68kmla.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=29&t=22517 It worked when connected to the pass-through board taken from an Apple 3.5 drive, but not when connected directly to the floppy port. I’m not really an Apple II guy so I’m not sure what’s up, but there are some good ideas in that forum thread if you want to follow them up.

Bryan March 15th, 2014
2:10 pm

Steve, I got it to work, using the information at the 68kmla site. There’s something about the Sony CXD1085B that allows this combination to work. Thanks for the tip!

Nicolas March 17th, 2014
10:16 am

Hi Steve,

when are you planning to get a new batch of floppy emu?

Thanks

Nicolas

Bryan March 17th, 2014
3:22 pm

One suggestion that you might want to consider in a future version… Ability to copy dsk image files within the Emu interface. I keep the blank800.dsk on the SD card, but I’d like to be able to make a copy of it on-the-fly and then use the copy, instead of taking the SD card and performing the copy elsewhere.

Alexander Frank March 22nd, 2014
2:25 am

Hi!
I really like your project and just bought one Macintosh Floppy Emulator “used” on eBay in germany.
It really does work with my Mac 128k, great!

One question/suggestion though:

Is it possible to preselect one disk image so that it automatically gets inserted on power-up?
If this isn’t yet implemented, you could look for a text file containing the filename or even a list of preselected images.
The C64 SD-Card project SD2IEC does support this… 🙂

And also the feature to copy/duplicate a disk image directly on the device without the need to connect the memory card to a PC…
Sorry for the spamming. 😉

Kyle Steele April 1st, 2014
3:28 pm

Where is a good place I can download Disk Images “dsk” for my macintosh plus? I use MacintoshGarden.org but all the files from there are “.SIT”. Does the floppy emu only recognize .DSK”?

Bryan April 1st, 2014
8:06 pm

DSK is not a normal floppy disk format for the Macintosh. The only DSK files I’ve found for the Mac are hard disk images. You can open SIT and SEA files by using the StuffIt for Windows or Mac. When you extract the images from SIT, make sure the image files have the .img file extension. Macintosh Floppy Emu can read .img files, but it won’t write to them. You can use the Disk Copy conversion tool that is linked on this page to convert the .img file to .DSK.

Kyle Steele April 1st, 2014
10:58 pm

Thank you Bryan but I kind of need a visual. A YouTube video on how to covert my files from macintosh garden into a DSK would nice. I’m very eager to purchase the Mac Emu but i’d like to understand how to do this process before I buy the Emu. @Steve Chamberlin hope you’re reading!

Eric April 3rd, 2014
5:07 pm

I would love to have this but getting it to fit my Powerbook Duo might be a problem. Duo never had internal floppy disk drive (take that iMac!!) and the external drive support is via dock that uses propriety 20-pin square connector. There are large dock that do have internal disk drive but they are often over $100 on eBay, untested, and the dock are known to have bad power supply so I’d have to pay more on repairs just to make it work for files.

Anyone have any idea how or where could I get a cable that uses the square connector that was widely used in early Powerbooks?

Nicolas April 4th, 2014
6:41 am

Hi Eric,

you might want to build your own cable using a HDI-20 connector taken from an external 1.44 MB drive.

Why don’t you support the full 532 bytes per sector? Is there any limitation in your system architecture, or was ist just because 512 bytes equals one SD card block? In this case, one floppy disk sector could be stored in two SD card blocks. Of course this would waste some storage capacity, but with today’s 2GB cards it would be acceptable.

Bryan April 20th, 2014
3:30 pm

I’m assuming the reason for the 512 bytes has nothing to do the emulator, and everything to do with holding down to standards. HFS standard is 512 bytes per sector. Apple’s DiskCopy utility therefore supports the 512 bytes standard. While true that the 512 byte setting can be changed, it would then throw off the standard, and you might run into incompatibility problems with many other utilities that use DiskCopy’s disk image format.

Patrick April 20th, 2014
3:49 pm

The other way: 524 bytes per sector is the standard for 400k and 800k floppies and the format used by Apple’s DiskCopy utility. *.dc42 files have 524 bytes per sector, and they have to be stripped down to 512 bytes to be used with the emulator. This causes incompatibilities with LisaOS and MFS.

The classic Mac OS uses 512 bytes of data per sector for both HFS and MFS – that can’t be changed. True, the disk stores a few additional bytes per sector, but they’re not data bytes and the OS doesn’t use them. They’re called “tag bytes” and are a hold-over from the days of the Lisa, but are basically unused by the Mac. DiskCopy stores the extra tag bytes for completeness’ sake, but if you check any Mac disk image you’ll see the tag bytes are just all zeroes.

Bryan April 20th, 2014
5:22 pm

DiskCopy images work with MacFloppyEmu just fine unchanged. I can download DiskCopy images right off the Apple site, and the emulator works with them. If however you want to write to the images, then you you have to convert the *.dc42 format to raw .dsk format, using the utility linked on this page. The emulator is advertised not to work with the Apple Lisa, but not because of the reasons with the sector size of the image file. So working with LisaOS would not be an issue.

Anonymous April 30th, 2014
4:27 pm

Does this come with floppy images?

Steven Hirsch June 10th, 2014
4:17 am

Would be wonderful if this could be tweaked to work with Apple 2 “SmartPort” signaling as well.

I’d love to. My 3D printer doesn’t have a large enough print area, though, and the prints are slow and unreliable enough that I don’t think it would be practical. If anyone else wants to try designing an enclosure, I’d be happy to work out a revenue share, or just refer interested people to them.

Daniel June 25th, 2014
2:46 pm

I just wanted to chime in a say that I just bought one of these… and it works great. I just had to reformat my SD card to Fat32 and MOST files show up and are accessible. I’ve been downloading games, but I think I might want to try and find some apps. I have an ImageWriter II that I want to make use of. 🙂

Ricky August 7th, 2014
8:04 pm

I bought your gadget just in time before it is out of stock.

I want to know how to convert 1.4MB image into 800K. My SE doesn’t support 1.4MB.

800K is a lower capacity disk format, so unfortunately there’s no simple conversion possible from 1.4MB. You can’t fit 1.4MB of data into 800K of space. Most software from the early Macintosh era was sold on both 800K and 1.4MB disks, so you’ll need to find the right disk image for the software you’re using. Or copy the files from a single 1.4MB disk onto two 800K disks, and use them that way.

Chris September 21st, 2014
10:49 am

I just got my Floppy Emu and love it, my Macintosh Plus is alive again! I highly recommend if your thinking of buying the Floppy Emu to buy the one with the extension cable, It would be a pain to have to lean over the mac every time you want to insert a new disk.

Steve, my Plus can only read the 400k and 800k .dsk images but I have an Apple HD20 (NOT SCSI) which is on my floppy drive port. So is there any chance of seeing a firmware update that would allow Floppy Emu to “mount” a 20mb .dsk? That would make it posable to run all my whole system off the FE and not need the noise Apple HD20 running!

Anyways thanks for a great tool for bring life back to dusty old Macs!

Can anyone point me in the right direction where I can find a disk image that will work on my Macintosh Plus? I just got my Floppy Emu and I only have disk images that work on my 512 K Macintosh. I’ve tried the apple support page and Macintosh Garden and I’ve even tried a couple other sites I googled. Would be awesome if I get this Mac Plus back to life. Thank you guys!

The Plus will work with any disk image that the 512K does, as well as many more. Check the instructions included with your Floppy Emu for a link to an archive of some other disk images too. Most things from Macintosh Garden should work as well, for example all of the 800K system disk images at http://macintoshgarden.org/apps/macintosh-system-6x

The easiest way to get started is with the link in the printed instructions that come with the Floppy Emu. This has a dozen or so disk images, already in the right format. All the 400K and 800K images should work with the Plus, like Dark Castle and MacPaint and System 6.

Stuff from Macintosh Garden can be harder. Often the files are .sit (StuffIt archive – similar to a zip file) or .sea (self-extracting archive, a program you have to run on a classic Mac). If you can find versions of the software you want in DiskCopy II format or raw image format, download those instead, as they’ll work directly with Floppy Emu and save you a LOT of work.

If the software you want is only available as a .sit file, there are programs for OS X and Windows that will directly uncompress a .sit archive, but I haven’t yet found one that I like. If you can find a good one, you could simplify things a little. Steven Hirsch, do you have a recommendation?

Otherwise to open a StuffIt archive, you’ll need a Mac emulator program like Mini vMac, a Mac ROM file, and a copy of the classic StuffIt program. There are several versions of the StuffIt program, which produce different version of .sit files. Newer versions of StuffIt can open older .sit files, but older StuffIts can’t open newer .sit files. The newest StuffIts won’t run on a Mac Plus, though, which can make things complicated. The basic method is to run an emulator like Mini vMac (my preference) or Basilisk II (if you need something newer), launch a copy of StuffIt, and use it to uncompress the .sit file. This will typically give you a DiskCopy II file, but it’s still inside the emulator. Use the Mini vMac plugins ImportFl and ExportFl (http://www.gryphel.com/c/minivmac/extras/importfl/index.html) to move files between the emulator and the host computer.

also, as we know this also works with the Apple IIgs, as long as you install this into a 800k 3.5 external HD floppy drive.

but wouldn’t it be cool is maybe someone could load up a boat load of images plug it into the back of a IIgs and Start Rocking in vintage App land, W/O needing the 800k floppy enclosure? I have some IIgs’s here.

I really would like to send you a IIgs for free, so you can have it laying around maybe it will give you creative inspiration
for future projects.?

after all a IIgs will do just about everything including all the Apple II software as well.

Steven Hirsch November 30th, 2014
7:40 am

I’ll second, third and fourth the request for Apple IIgs and, as an added bonus, Apple //c SmartPort compatibility. In the interim, I will temporarily sacrifice an AppleDisk 3.5 to make use of the passthrough board.

Michael December 5th, 2014
9:58 pm

Hello,
I’m just received my Floppy Emu. i went out to Best Buy and purchased a cheap 8 gb SanDisk Ultra (40mb/s) . Brought it home, plugged it into my Mbpro Retina. Already pre-formatted FAT – so just copied some .dsk files to it and then put into my new Floppy Emu. Next, I plugged my Floppy Emu into my 1984 (April) original 128k Mac, and that was it. All the dsk files were easy to read/write to with no issue so far. I’m really excited about this. Lot to mess around with this weekend. Thank you so much!

Bill February 5th, 2015
7:53 am

Thanks for the great product and fast service! My floppy emu is working wonderfully. I love the lit LCD. The clear acrylic case took a little bit of assembling, but the finished product looks slick and professional.

techknight February 8th, 2015
10:57 am

Food for thought: As mentioned performance varies with SD card. What about attaching some SPI-Based RAM to the MCU? Open the disk images in RAM for read/write/format access. Then when the Emulator goes idle, or gets an eject command, it commences the write to the SD card at that point?

Good thought. I considered that approach, but eventually decided against it. Performance is mostly determined by the speed of the Macintosh floppy interface, and not the SD card. For reading, there wouldn’t be any noticeable benefit to caching the disk image in RAM. For writing, it might be anywhere from no benefit to perhaps 2x faster depending on the card. I decided it wasn’t really worth the extra complexity.

Steve Fraser February 11th, 2015
11:58 am

The kit arrived in good time given it travelled all the way to UK. It works well and I’m looking forward to putting it to good use. One thing, if thing it be, I wish I’d ordered the plastic case for it at the same time as the order. It makes me nervous sitting on the desk there in all it’s unprotected glory. But well done you for making it.

Keep the board off of metal surfaces and you’ll be fine. 🙂 I’ve used a pair of Emus without cases for about two years, so they’re pretty rugged in normal use. The case does add a nice touch of polish, though!

Steve Fraser February 11th, 2015
12:20 pm

OK, thanks for that. I’ve just ordered a case in any event. It seems a good idea. I wish I had done so in the first place but no worries. A super piece of kit for those who like fooling around with old Macs, even if I don’t know why. Next project id capacitor replacement on an SE/30. Terrifying for someone with fingers as stubby as mine!

New Floppy Emus have the backlight enabled by default. For older ones, it varies depending on the board revision. For most boards, you can add a piece of wire at the location labeled R5 on the main board, or between LIGHT and GND on the LCD board. See more info here: http://www.bigmessowires.com/2014/04/04/floppy-emu-backlight/

Kurt February 18th, 2015
1:19 pm

I got the one I ordered for my Classic II yesterday! It works great, and looks fantastic in the clear case. I also got it set up in HD20 mode. My only comment is that I found the firmware updating instructions ambiguous — hold down next and prev buttons, then press and release reset… does that mean keep holding the next and prev buttons until the updating is done, or let go of them? At any rate, I got it to work, but I was a bit nervous about messing it up.

Steve Fraser February 25th, 2015
12:27 pm

Well, the box kit arrived and after an ‘interesting’ time putting it together, what a darling it looks. I installed the HD20 software and it works a treat on the Classic. All in all a super piece of kit. One query, as the words read I can get HD20 mode running on an SE/30 if I install and boot from a drive containing HD20init. Is that correct? Either way, it’s great. Thanks for working it all out.

If you can make Twiggy drives work with just a ROM swap in the Macintosh, then it’s likely that Floppy Emu could be modified to emulate the Twiggy drive. If you send me whatever technical info you have about the drive, the disk format, and the ROM, I’ll take a look at it.

Bryan March 6th, 2015
12:38 am

I’m not getting it… Why would we want to emulate twiggy drives?

The only reason we are even emulating Sony drives is that 98-percent of content for the Lisa are only 400K disk images. If there were twiggy disk images floating about, then that would be one thing. But even then, it is easy to just copy the files from the twiggy disk image to the 400K disk image. We should actually be running away from twiggy drives and disk images.

Mine is #91… This and the CFFA boards for the Apple II are two of the finest hobbiest-produced products I’ve ever seen. It is amazing how much the MFE has been upgraded, despite not needing additional hardware to address these new features. It shows that Steve designed the product right when it came to future growth.

Cool. I need to learn what that magic pass-through board in the A9M0106 floppy drive does, because whatever it does, it makes Floppy Emu work on the IIgs. Maybe I can duplicate the functionality in the Floppy Emu, then it could work directly without needing the pass-through board.

Steven Hirsch March 11th, 2015
3:54 am

It would be even more ideal if Floppy Emu could pretend to be a Unidisk 3.5. That would extend functionality to the Apple IIc in addition to IIgs. There is documentation on the bus protocol floating around in the A2 community. Just say the word and I’ll round it up for you.

@Bryan March: it’s worthwhile to work with Twiggies because the Lisa 1 is a historic machine, of course! The software that ran on a Lisa 1—the first GUI environment for a personal computer ever made—will only run on a Lisa 1. There are differences between versions 1.0 and the versions that came later for the Lisa 2.

Twiggy disks are now 32 years old, and many are degrading or already useless. With the emulator, someone could easily boot up a disk utility like BLU and save some of their old media, or install a version of the Office System or the Workshop from images and use that to save their old documents.

There is plenty of Lisa software that hasn’t been backed up onto modern media yet. Twiggy-capable emulators would help.

Finally, there is as yet no way to “just copy the files from the twiggy disk image to the 400K disk image” other than stuff like:
– copy disk image to a real Twiggy using a Lisa 1.
– copy file from the Twiggy to a ProFile hard drive.
– plug the ProFile into a Lisa 2.
– copy file from the ProFile to a 400k drive.

and that’s assuming that the newer Lisa OS running on the Lisa 2 can read the old OS’s filesystem on the ProFile (the filesystem changed between versions). Don’t know whether that would actually work.

A Twiggy mode for Floppy Emu would certainly help Lisa 1 owners for backing up their disks. But I’m not sure it would really help with copying files to a 400K disk or disk image. You could make a Twiggy disk image with the Lisa 1, but then what would you do with that on your Lisa 2? Maybe somebody in the Lisa community could write a software utility to parse the contents of a Twiggy disk image, extract the Lisa filesystem contents, and create a new 400K disk image with those contents.

Steven Hirsch March 15th, 2015
9:12 am

I just sent a tarball of information on the Apple 2 Unidisk to your e-mail address. Gmail works very hard to strip attachments and dump outgoing mail in the bitbucket, so let me know if you fail to receive it?

Tom Stepleton March 15th, 2015
9:13 am

The 400k thing is really a red herring, but I remarked on it it since Bryan brought it up.

Lisa 1 and Lisa 2 are very similar computers with some interoperability, but from a conservation perspective, it’s probably more worthwhile to think of them as separate machines with separate filesystems, operating systems, and file formats.

There are probably not a lot of Lisa 1 owners out there who are just dying for a way to finally get their Twiggy docs on a 3.5″ 400k diskette. Even if there were, a Twiggy holds 870k, so it might be a tight fit.

Instead, the real value of a Twiggy emulator comes from things like:

(1) direct Twiggy->disk image backups

(2) making it easy to load/install software onto the Lisa from images, like BLU, the Office System, and the Workshop. This in turn really opens up the number of backup options people have available for their data.

(3) making it easy to create and test “experimental” disk images, in order to reverse-engineer the filesystem.

Item 3 cannot be done in an emulator, since no emulator exists yet for the Lisa 1. Of course, having an easy way to try out arbitrary boot disks in a Lisa would probably speed the development of viable emulators, too.

Hi Byron, please send me an email with the details and I’ll look into it. With some Macs, you can’t boot from the HD20, but you can mount the HD20 after booting from another disk. I think this is the case with the IIsi, though I’d need to double-check. The Classic 2 might be the same way?

Sve Grancharov May 31st, 2015
12:02 pm

Hi, I am using it on Apple II with firmware apple-II-0.1D-F3. It works nice, but have problem because it cannot remember selected disk on restart(probably I am wrong but…). On each restart I have to select disk. Is it possible to keep somewhere previously selected disk and on restart on computer to boot again from it.
thank you great device 🙂

If you restart the computer with CTRL+Apple+RESET, the currently inserted Floppy Emu disk will remain “inserted” in the virtual disk drive. But if you turn the computer off, then on, the Floppy Emu loses power and resets, and will return to the disk selection menu.

A few people have suggested saving the name of the current disk in Emu’s internal EEPROM, and automatically re-inserting it the next time the Emu starts up. I’m not sure if that would be helpful, or annoying, and whether it would be appropriate for Mac disks, Apple II disks, or both. Any opinions? For now I’ve elected to keep it simple and not do any automatic re-insertion of old disks.

I have a few questions for you. I upgraded my emu firmware for the Mac+Lisa firmware this week.

1- if I plan/want to use it with an Apple IIc/IIgs eventually, Is there a simple way to switch from one emulation to another?
2- do I need to update both files each tine, or only the second step is enough?
3- pictures of the case do not show the built-in 19 pin DB-9 side, but I suppose it fits well. Going to order one now.

Also, I never tried it, but is it possible to use folders with the emu on the SD card? Could simplify images management for different system types.

To switch between the Apple II and the Mac+Lisa, you will need to switch which firmware is installed on the Floppy Emu. Yes, you need to update both firmware files (one is for the CPLD chip and one for the AVR microcontroller). Updating the firmware takes about 1 minute.

Yes, you can use folders to organize the floppy disk images on the SD card.

I was not sure if the CPLD firmware were identical or different for each usage.

What would be cool is if we could put both CPDL/AVR firmware in a specific folder (say appleii and mac folder) and from there having a way to trigger a process (ex: hit reset/select) and have the device able to initiate the firmware swap in an automated way. I guess the board is not “smart” enough to do this…

Thanks for the picture of the case. I placed my order yesterday with one of the new universal cable, even if I may not have a real requirement for it. Could be used for my IIgs ROM3, but it also have the CFFA3000 card inserted. Maybe I’ll be able to use both item for transferring data from one to the other.

Maybe eventually you’ll be able to emulate other floppies (Atari, Commodore)…

If I want to use the Apple III Disk II Cable in the link with your Universal Adapter Extension Cable, I guess I should order the female version of the former cable. Does that make sense?

The Apple III Disk II Cable is only 13″ long and need to be connected internally in the Apple III (to boot from), which mean the EMU will either be on the back of the computer (not ideal) or I’ll have the cable running trough the cover, and it becomes ugly (or a Big Mess of Wires, your choice!).

I’m not certain, but it looks like you could combine the male version of that Apple III cable with the detachable part of the normal Floppy Emu extension cable (or any 20-pin ribbon cable) to make a single longer cable. It’s a little confusing, but I think the female version of the Apple III cable is meant to go directly between the Apple III and the drive electronics, whereas the male version is meant to be connected to a second cable.

Steve Hammond July 18th, 2015
12:24 am

First, I need to confess it was late 911pm for me) when I wrote my previous comment, and my brain was not at its best. I wrote “the female version” while I really meant “the male version”.

The other thing I have not realized is the fact that your standard cable already had a detachable DB-19 board. I was under the impression that the ribbon cable was soldered to the DB-19 pins. I have the cable in front of me now, and I can see it clearly.

That said, you’re right. I will order a male Apple III Disk II Cable and I should be able to connect and boot from the Floppy EMU on my Apple III.

The female Apple III Disk II Cable can probably be connected directly to the Floppy EMU 20 pin socket on the PCB. But the 13″ length will make it very weird to use.

Did you attend Kansas Fest this year?

Tim Voss July 29th, 2015
4:33 pm

I got mine in today and I love it. One question: I am using it with a Apple //gs ROM03, if I am in Smartport mode and hooked directly to the system, it boots fine. If I hook into the 3.5 drive and try to boot, it doesn’t work. Would the Universal Adapter Extension Cable help with this or is it the way things are? I did update the firmware to the apple 2 firmware before using. Other than that small issue, I love it. I was able to move some files I haven’t seen for years to my PC using floppy emu and ciderpress. Thank you for making it.

I’m pretty sure that behavior is normal and is a limitation of the Apple II hardware. When booting, the Apple II can only check drive 1 for a slot, not drive 2. When you connect the Floppy Emu daisy-chained to a 3.5 drive, then the 3.5 drive will be slot 5 drive 1 and the Emu will be slot 5 drive 2. So the computer checks the 3.5 drive, sees that there’s no disk there (or not a bootable disk), and gives up. If you use that configuration and boot from a 3.5 inch floppy, then you should still be able to access the Floppy Emu as a second disk. You’ve made me curious whether there’s any work-around for this. If you connected a second 3.5 drive and then the Floppy Emu, I think the two 3.5 drives would be slot 5 drives 1 and 2, and then the Emu would be slot 2 drive 1, which might be bootable. Or you could install a separate disk controller card, and connect either the 3.5 drive or the Emu to that, so that it can be drive 1 for that slot.

Yes, it requires an extra 3.5″ boot disk to store ProBOOT if you don’t have any other mass storage.

Eric August 8th, 2015
8:09 am

The firmware update on my latest Emu has been plagued with the “wrong CPLD” error, though on my older (purple) board, it worked with no issue. I copied both the .xvf and .bin files to the SD at the same time, booted my Mac Classic II with the Emu connected, and then shut down, leaving the safe to power down dialog up so that the Emu had power, but the Mac OS wasn’t running.

As soon as I complete the first part of the update (the .xvf file) I get the frowny “wrong CPLD” error–that is, before I’ve even had the chance to run part two. I ran part two, and the things seem fine, but if I hit the reset (or power down and back up, which is what happens because of the status of the Mac as mentioned above) I get the frowny face again.

I’ve gone back to the non-hd20 firmware with no issues and tried again with the same result.

Seeing “wrong cpld” after installing the first part is normal, because the two halves of the firmware aren’t in sync yet. Is it possible you installed the first part twice, but the second part not at all? This is a common mistake, since the two parts require similar but not identical buttons to initiate. This would explain the behavior you’re seeing.

Steve Hammond August 9th, 2015
9:20 am

Yea, I also was surprised when I switched the floppy emu to the Apple II firmware to see the CPDL error on screen. But once I did the second part it worked and never complain again.

Jeff Tranter September 4th, 2015
5:25 am

I just received my Floppy Emu and it is working great. One question: In Smartport mode I have created four 32MB ProDOS images named smart0.po through smart3.po. The machine can boot from it but only sees two drives (slot 5 drives 1 and 2). Should it be able to see the other two drives?

Are all four of your ProDOS images displayed on the Floppy Emu’s LCD screen? On my //c with ROM 0 and apple-II-0.1J3-F6, it works as described, mounting 4 Smartport drives on S5 D1 and D2 and S2 D1 and D2. I’m not sure about the serial port mapping… maybe the ROM dynamically maps extra drives to a different slot, depending on whether the serial port is in use?

Jeff Tranter September 4th, 2015
10:56 am

Yes, all four images are shown. Serialports are not connected to anything.
Accessing S2,D1 and D2 gives NO DEVICE CONNECTED.
I’ll try booting with a different disk image – this is the ProDOS User’s Disk and maybe it does something when it runs it’s startup program. I can try a plain ProDOS image.

I’m testing by running Apple II System Utilities v3.1 (which is on the first Smartport volume), and selecting the “list volumes” option. It shows the names of all four volumes, and the slots and drive numbers for each. I suppose it’s possible that you’ll get different results depending on what boot disk is used for the first Smartport volume – sorry I can’t say for sure.

Jeff Tranter September 4th, 2015
12:48 pm

I fired up the System Utilities disk and I am now able to access all 4 drives, both from the application and from BASIC. I can get to the drives from BASIC by setting PREFIX but I didn’t see a way to find out what slot and drive numbers the last two drives are associated with (if any). I’ll experiment some more, but it looks like this will work and I am all set. Thanks for the help!

Jeff Tranter September 4th, 2015
1:22 pm

I think the issue was the ProDOS version. It works fine when booted from ProDOS 2.0.3, and the four drives are mapped to slot 6 and slot 2.

Jeremiah September 24th, 2015
7:58 pm

All I can say is wow!!! I purchased the universal floppy emulator. Now granted, I personally only one a mac. But I have several friend that have some apples, so I thought it would be a great investment to go all in. I could not be happier. The quality of this is great! I have used it for my Mac Quadra 650 (for files only), But where I really think it shines, is using it as a HD for the Mac Plus! Thanks so much for a terrific piece of hardware…

FrankG September 25th, 2015
4:58 am

According to this statement: ◾Reads and writes emulated 140K, 400K, 800K, or 1.4MB floppy disk images, or hard disk images up to 2GB

The floppy EMU can write disk images as well. I was wondering if this true? Or am I misreading the statement.

That means the emulated disks are readable and writable by the Mac or Apple II, as opposed to being read-only disks like a CD-ROM. But the Floppy Emu does not create new disk image files on the SD card, if that’s what you’re wondering. To create and edit disk images on a Windows or OSX computer, you can use tools like HFVExplorer or Ciderpress – see the FAQ above.

This is a great product! With my Mac Plus (which has a Micro Mac Accelerator installed) I am able to mount floppies from the EMU. But no matter what I do I can never get the Hard Disk part to work. I installed the firmware properly as the device works. Is it possible the firmware needs to be installed again? Every time I go into HD20 mode the screen says something like “disabled” or “write mode changed 6 (or 7, or 2)”.

I make disk files and floppies using HFV Explorer on Windows…. Is there a boot sequence I should follow? Do you have any tips?

Thank you for replying. Today I did more digging and I found two pre-made hd20 disks that when inserted booted up the Plus. Without the Control Panel and Extension the Plus sees the upgrade as a 020. But this showed promise… I could not seem to format a disk, but that was with the upgrade turned on. I found a way to convert a disk into HFS, and once I turned off the “instruction cache” in the upgrade control panel, the disk mounts! Next is to make a disk and see if the Plus will format it.

Than you for the tip! Floppy mode works great with the upgrade turned on. What exactly am I doing by turning it off; what makes that work?

iain October 11th, 2015
5:45 am

Hi, I have a flopy emu and it works great on my iiGS, of course once i’d read a bit more and found i mustnt have my 3.5″ floppy daisy-chained with the floppy emu on the end. Ok, generally np as I’m booting it into HD emulation mode or apple ii floppy emu modes and both work great! I’ll soon try it on my iie for floppy emulation.

However, one thing I just cant find how to do – how to cold boot a disk? my iiGS and my iie both have Z80 cards, how can I select then boot from a CP/M disk (physical floppy or emulated) with the floppy emu? has anyone done this? I may be missing something obvious or not understand enough about how apple ii’s work. my iie, btw has disk controllers in slot 5 and 6, so i could use either 19 or 20 pin connections on that machine if it helps..

Hi iain, daisy-chaining with a 3.5″ Apple II drive is fine as long as you have the universal adapter with the switch set to the 3.5 position. To boot an Apple II from a 3.5″ or 5.25″ emulated floppy image, turn on the computer, select the desired disk from the Floppy Emu LCD menu, then press CTRL+Open Apple+RESET to reset the Apple II. Feel free to email me directly if you have other questions.

iain October 15th, 2015
4:18 am

thanks, will try!

Steve Hammond October 15th, 2015
12:19 pm

Hi Steve,

This item Apple Disk Drive A/B Switch and Cable, $15, it just allow to connect the drives to one cable, and use one at a time, but do not allow daisy chain or use both the EMU and the real floppy simultaneously. Do I get it correctly?

That’s right. The A/B cable is useful for owners of Lisas or Macs with only a single internal floppy connector. If your Mac has both an internal and an external floppy connector, then you don’t need it.

Alain Zanchetta November 14th, 2015
10:31 am

Great device !
On my IIgs, it works well as 3.5 device (did not test 5.25 on this guy) but on my //c+, I cannot make it work as a 3.5 device (here it works fine as 5.25):
neither connecting it externally with the universal adapter nor connecting it internally instead of the default 3.5 drive.
Any idea ?

Steve Hammond November 14th, 2015
11:37 am

Alain,

Do you have the ROM 3 version on your Iic? If not, that may be the issue.

Earlier this week I had a report from a //c+ user that 3.5 inch emulation didn’t work on his machine. I don’t have a //c+ myself, so I can’t directly verify that, but I will update when I learn more.

Alain Zanchetta November 15th, 2015
11:06 am

One thing that I can tell is:
(1) when I plug it inside the //c+ instead of the internal drive, the status led blinks, but it does not boot.
(2) when I just plug it to the outside connector, the status led does not light at all.

Unfortunately, I don’t have the skills to investigate further, such as trying to boot trace scenario (1) to find out where it fails.

It looks like the //c+ isn’t compatible with the current 3.5 inch emulation mode, sorry. Apparently it differs somehow from the 3.5 inch disk interface on the IIGS, which was the basis for the Floppy Emu design. As a temporary work-around if you need to mount 800K disk images on a //c+, you can mount them in Smartport mode instead of 3.5 inch mode. If I find a better solution, I’ll post an update here. My apologies for the misleading info – I’ve updated the user manual to reflect that the //c+ does not work in 3.5 inch mode.

Dana November 17th, 2015
6:05 pm

I ordered my Floppy Emu on Friday June 5 and it arrived Monday June 8 which I thought was incredibly fast from the southern California to Maine over the weekend. I bought it for my MacPlus and my MacSE. It is amazing for the Macs.

I have an Apple //c (ROM 3) and want to use the Floppy Emus Smartport Hard Disk Emulation.

I have the Floppy Emu SN 0392, Clear Acrylic case and the Standard Adapter Extension Cable.

Hi guys,
I have come across a very interesting disk, which appears to be something that Larry Kenyon wrote. It is a test disk for the Sony 400k drive, with programs dating from July 1983. It looks as though this was used for the original configuring, testing, and variable speed control for the “new” Sony 400k drives that had not yet been approved by Steve Jobs at this point (still going for the Twiggy drives on the Macintosh).

You can actually control the different speeds of the sony drive, like a software gear shift.
This is a very exciting discovery. Perhaps this would be a useful utility for the Floppy EMU for the orignal Mac?

Let me know if you would like me to send you photos, or a copy of the disk or disk image to check it out.

Best regards,
Adam

Steve December 16th, 2015
5:34 am

Under Apple II it says “requires firmware update”. If I want to switch this between a Mac Plus and an Apple IIc, do I need to keep reflashing the firmware, or does the firmware update support both?

Steve Hammond December 16th, 2015
6:48 am

The two firmware (Mac/Lisa vs Apple II) are totally different and you need to reflash for each type of machine.

Steve December 16th, 2015
6:51 am

Thanks Steve!

Joe O December 22nd, 2015
6:58 am

Thank Steve! I’m number #612!! Hopefully will be able to help Steve get more of them into the hands of other vintage computer hobbyists! I’m a member of a non-profit group, the Vintage Computer Federation http://www.vintagecomputerfederation.org/ we do a number of shows around the country, and are affiliated with addtional shows around the globe. So it couldn’t hurt working with us. 🙂

kpw January 8th, 2016
8:27 pm

Model B #801 arrived today. Case is a work of art and floppy emu works great on my //e so far. Easy setup and operation. Forgot to update firmware for Apple II at first, but update was easy. Default is Mac. Super fast shipping.

Dan January 23rd, 2016
6:36 pm

Just ordered the B model, can’t wait to get it. Wanted a case but they were out of stock. Any ETA on when those will be available?

Thanks, I expect to have more cases available by the time shipping resumes on the 29th.

MIKE D January 25th, 2016
8:19 pm

Hello,

I just got my model B, I’m trying to get the firmware updated to run on my IIe Platinum. I have tried several 4gb microSD cards (smallest I could find,) and the device does not recognize them, despite all of them being formatted FAT-32. The screen reads a big question mark, with “No SD card? Card Error 10:5” when I try to boot it. I am trying to troubleshoot it and I am at a loss as for why it isn’t recognizing the cards. Any advice?

Steve January 26th, 2016
6:57 am

Another person recently had the same problem, and was able to resolve it by trying a different sd card. Or if there appears to be a hardware problem, you can return the board for a repair. I’m traveling this week with limited internet, but I’ll send you some specific suggested sd card models when I return home on Friday.

Hi Mike D, following up on your question: the card I’m currently using for the “vintage software collection” is a Kingston 4GB class 4 SD card, and the UPC code is 740617120639. The Floppy Emu should work with pretty much any SD or SDHC card, though. If you’ve tried several different cards and they all show a message saying “No SD card? Error 10:5”, then please contact me at the “more questions” email address above, for more troubleshooting or to arrange a return.

Mike D January 28th, 2016
8:11 pm

Found that SanDisk Ultra microSDHC UHS-I @8gb works as well. Just got my butt handed to me on Karateka and Conan. Nice product. Thanks!

Do you have something that works in the opposite direction? I have a vintage macintosh plus that i will be upgrading to G4. I want to be able to use the internal 800K or 1.44MB floppy drive but i need a device to control the drive with the 19-pin interface that connects to the host with USB. Do you make something like that?

Thanks anyway, i wanted to avoid using an external mechanical eject drive for posterity reasons (I want the floppy bay to be useful) and i found a good solution that others may be interested in if they are doing the same build.

I actually opted for the Iomega LS120 (SuperDisk) drive as it can be modulated to read / write as little as 800KB and as much as 120MB. Plus, it has an auto-eject feature similar to that of the Macintosh. It is an IDE interface so i will be using an IDE to USB adapter. Thanks anyway!!

Nick Tullar February 2nd, 2016
10:12 am

Great Product!!!!

I have been waiting a long time for a device like this. This is defiantly the crown jewel accessory for my retro Apple and Mac collection.

Joseph Oprysko February 2nd, 2016
11:42 am

Is it possible to upgrade the firmware to allow multiple floppy images at the same time (like to have a boot disk and data disk mounted simultaneously)

Is there a way to connect an external LED for the access light? I’d like to try 3D printing my own case, that resembles (or fits into) either an Mac external floppy enclosure or an Apple II enclosure.

Apple II emulation of 3.5 inch disks is now also working on the Apple IIc+, with the newest firmware.

jay February 15th, 2016
1:00 pm

Hi there, I love your device and am so glad to see someone supporting our old hardware.
I tried to update the firmware on my model A, and something went wrong. Restarting, I couldn’t get past the error screen, and on a second restart I no longer get anything on the screen. The power light is on, but the screen is blank and the status light does not blink.
I have tried a bunch of button presses and combinations but to no effect. Is there a way for me to revive this unit?
Thanks!

Hi Jay, sorry to hear about your trouble. I sent you a follow-up support by email.

Waltermixxx March 11th, 2016
9:29 pm

I just purchased a Model A + Universal Adapter + Acrylic case. 🙂

This is such a cool product, I think it is the creme de la creme of Apple retro storage devices. 🙂

the Video’s on YouTube sold me. Cannot wait to get my IIgs connected and booting 🙂

Steven F April 18th, 2016
4:36 pm

This is an amazing device! It helped bring my 128k Mac with a bad internal drive back to life. It’s really elegantly designed and I love the acrylic case.

Steve Hammond April 18th, 2016
5:51 pm

Hi Steve,

I was recently listening to the RCR podcast (an episode from late last fall) and they talked a little bit about the FloppyEMU model B. Can’t remember who sneaked of it, but he said that the new version can emulate Apple II and Mac without a firmware change. Can you confirm if true? Maybe I misunderstood too…

That’s not quite accurate. The newer model B can emulate all types of Apple II drives without the need for extra hardware, whereas the older model A requires a separate adapter if you need Apple II 3.5 inch disk support. See the compatibility table above for the complete details. Both models have separate firmware for Mac or Apple II support.

Paul really says there’s no firmware flash required, so his understanding is wrong!

Steve Hammond April 25th, 2016
3:43 am

Steve, do you know where I could buy a small(2-3 inches) disk cable to put on the board of the floppy emu to get the internal connector just outside the the emu case? I think it would need to be female to male.

Try DigiKey in their “rectangular cable assemblies” section. They have some 20-pin ribbon cables.

Marty May 8th, 2016
5:23 pm

Question – given that one can only “mount” one disk image at a time, I’m wondering if the Emu can be used to do an Classic Mac OS installation to a real SCSI hard drive mounted in the Mac. I’m guessing the answer would be YES if there is an appropriate Disk Copy utility installed in the .DSK file one is booting. Restating the question, can I easily use the EMU to “image” a blank SCSI disk already installed in a Mac, as opposed to just booting the Mac.

Chris! Buy now! Who knows how many DB-19 connectors he will have left. Unless the efforts in getting new ones made was successful.

ictjohn1967(John) May 11th, 2016
9:37 am

Have been waiting on these to come available. Hadn’t checked in a few days and just saw today they were available. Have a ][+, 2 //gs machines, a Mac Plus and Mac SE30 that I’d love to get booted back up again. Can’t wait til it arrives!

Chris May 12th, 2016
9:36 am

Just bought mine. Looking forward to getting it. Only thing I’m curious about, can you install a System to a Mac only using this? I.E. Can you ’emulate’ disk swaps without powering off the machine?

CHRISTOPHE May 18th, 2016
12:46 pm

hello, i’m french and i use you floppy emul. Now i’m use it with the 2gs but with smartport, when i put 1,2,3 or 4 image disk, i have sometime “files not contiguous” what is the problem?
thanks.

The files must be in a contiguous range of sectors on the SD card, in order for optimal performance. If they’re not, you can delete all the files on the SD card and then copy them back. Or reformat the SD card, and then replace the files. A defragmenting tool should also work, but the other methods are easier. 🙂

Yes, shipments can be sent to any country by US Postal Service First Class Package service. See the shipping rates on the product pages in the BMOW store. I don’t have any direct experience with the Franklin Ace, but in general if the computer is Apple II compatible then it should work.

ictjohn1967 (John) May 25th, 2016
6:53 am

I’ve been really happy with this unit. Allowed me to get my //gs back up and running again, which then turned into figuring out how to get the hard drive in it running again, and now a fully functional system again. Can’t wait to try it out on my old Macs… Great product, just wish I would have the patience to put the box together! LOL!

RubenA May 25th, 2016
10:38 pm

Hey, Steve I’ve been trying to get the emu to work on my Mac Plus, but to no avail. My Mac has a bad disk drive, and a disk icon with a question mark. When I try to boot from the 6.0.8.dsk, you see the icon change to a happy face, also see the track, and side numbers changing, then “idle” appears. But no boot. I’ve tried this with the other 800k or 400k .dsk images with the same results. Any ideas as to why no complete boot?

That’s hard to say without knowing the history of the machine – possibly it’s RAM-related? Send me an email or ask the Mac gurus as 68kmla.org for troubleshooting advice.

John May 28th, 2016
2:48 am

Ive had my Floppy Emu (Model B) for about a week now.

It is a MUST HAVE!
I previously had a MicroDrive, which was hard to put files on. Not with this! In disk emulation, all you have to do is drag the disk image to the folder. For HD, you have to open it in cider press. Still easier than the MD! And Micro SDs are EASY to find vs CF cards.
Its definitely faster than a regular old disk drive, but it is slower than a MicroDrive, which really doesn’t matter since coursing a 25 year old computer!
The only thing I wish it had was the ability to emulate the disk emulation and HD at the same time. I know, all you have to do is turn the computer off and on again, but still, it would then be perfect.
Instructions are a little unclear at a few spots, but after a day of trial and error, I finally figured it all out.

Thanks, and let me know if there are specific sections of the instructions that need more fleshing out.

John May 28th, 2016
7:44 am

I know I probably shouldn’t post this on here and just email you, but its a question everyone might want to know the answer to.

When I plug the Floppy Emu into a 3.5 inch drive, my IIGS boots from the drive, NOT the Emu. This is when its on smart port mode. Even if I restart, it doesn’t pick up the HD, which boots if its directly plugged into the computer.
And by the way, looking in the Apple IIGS manual, it says the disk drive daisy chain should go 3.5 drive first, smart port(FEMU), and 5.25. If I wanted to use a 5.25 drive, would it still work fine if I plugged in a 5.25 drive, with the FEMU attached?
I might just be doing something wrong too.

That’s right. Apple II systems can normally only boot from drive 1, not drive 2. When you have the Emu in Smartport mode and daisy-chained behind an Apple 3.5 drive, the Emu becomes slot 5, drive 2. You can use it as a data disk with that setup, but the IIGS won’t boot from it.

Yes, please see section 7 in the manual. Any Apple computer with an external DB-19 or internal 20-pin floppy disk connector should work.

Colin Yarwood June 2nd, 2016
6:29 am

Steve

I am pretty well sold on your Floppy Emu.

Can I be very basic and ask: will it work with an Apple ][ Europlus? Mine has been sitting quietly watching 16 later Apples/Macs pass it by and it would be great to get it going again if only to allow another generation to play Lemonade Stand and learn Economics from it like my 38 year old did at age 2!

Secondly do I gather it will run on my Mac Plus too? If I can get it out of its carry bag and start it too!

Howabout LC475?

Is ther anyt limit to the size of SD card – I have a 128 GB SD card which I use for storing movies with a compact flash on a USB card reader so I can download stuff for my older Macs from my MBP….?

Other wise getting it and setting it up to amuse me after my upcoming hip op!

Please see the manual (above) for full details. Yes, those machines are all supported. The LC475 will require an internal connection to its logic board, as described in the manual. For SD cards, smaller capacity cards are preferred and usually give slightly better performance.

Colin Yarwood June 3rd, 2016
6:51 am

Thanks Steve,

Well Friday afternoon has come and I am delighted to say that both my screen and Apple ][ powered up first time after 30+ years!

I know from using them 18 years ago with a 2e I had and foolishly loaned to a neighbours boys – who trashed it – that at least one of the Disk ][ drives isnt set up right but with Floppy Emu I can work without.

It will be interesting to try Visicalc and Supercalc again.

Cleaning to do now….. 30+ year grime on the A2M2010P Green requires attention.

I just bought a Macintosh IIcx, and thought I give my Model B a try. Floppy mode works no problem, but when in hard disk mode, I can’t boot since I have internal hard drive. How can I make the EMU bootable? This was (of course) never issue with my Mac Plus.

Hi again. Loving your Floppy Emu. However, I have hit a snag. Nothing wrong with the fantastic unit, more the machine I intend to use it with.
In short the only (safe-ish) way to use it in something like a Macintosh Colour Classic is to use it and try and peak at the LCD display, while the casing is off!!!

All that I’d need to fix this is a male to female Floppy ribbon cable (instead of the supplied female to female). Do you think it could be possible to make such a thing and maybe even add it as an option to buy one for us Colour Classic users? Or has someone else thought of this?

Digikey sells 20-pin ribbon cables in many lengths and genders, although I’m not following how a different gender cable would be used. The supplied 20-pin cable (with the detachable 19-pin adapter) is the correct gender to fit the floppy connector on the Color Classic’s logic board. Since the CC doesn’t have an external DB-19 port, this is the only connection option for that machine.

Chris June 27th, 2016
11:56 am

I can only use the female internal floppy cable in the CC which really needs to be extended out. Since that goes deep inside the machine and to the edge connector. Meaning I had to use that cable inside the machine directly to the Emu since it wasn’t the correct gender (female cable supplied with the Emu and female from the edge connector). It’s hard to explain clearly but basically the only way I’d get it to work without an extra cable or gender changer is to plug tthe Emu directly into the cable that was plugged into the internal floppy drive, which gives little slack. That’s why a simple gender changer for either ribbon would work and would be simpler solution.
It just wasn’t a fun experience trying to read the display while barely a couple of inches way from a toasty death by CRT! xD

I might check Digikey out, hopefully postage won’t be too much of a problem. Just thought I’d suggest it anyway! Other Classic/Compact users probably wouldn’t have the problem being their floppy connector is on the mainboard.

The internal ribbon cable is designed to go directly from the computer’s logic board to the Emu. It’s not an extension cable for the pre-existing floppy cable, so there shouldn’t be any need for gender changers unless there’s something unique about the Color Classic that I’m not aware of. Here are some cables like you described, if you want to experiment:

If you’re still stuck, please email me directly and I’ll do my best to help.

Jeff July 26th, 2016
1:30 pm

I just got my Floppy Emu rev. B – it’s great! I have a potentially stupid question, though. I’m using an Apple IIGS and I have four real drives – two 3.5’s and two 5.25’s. I understand this is normally the max for daisy chaining but the IIGS manual says you *can* daisy chain more drives, they’ll just appear in slot 2, which is the “overflow” slot.

Will this work in any configuration with the Floppy Emu? I briefly tried it last night and it didn’t seem to work, but I’m wondering if it just limits me to using one type of emulation.

Failing that, is there any way to remove one drive (so the Floppy Emu would be the fourth) but still be able to use all the emulation modes while in the daisy chain? Or can you only switch modes back and forth if you’re connected directly to the IIGS as the only drive?

The Floppy Emu can be daisy-chained or be directly connected to the IIGS as the only drive. If daisy chained, you need to observe the drive type ordering rules (described in the manual) as if Floppy Emu were a physical disk drive – 3.5 inch drives before smartport drives before 5.25 inch drives.

Vitor July 27th, 2016
12:11 pm

Hello, I have an original Macintosh 128k and I’d like to ask you a question: if I use my computer with the Floppy Emu, will I have to put a system diskette in the internal disk drive, or can I emulate having a system diskette plus a software disk, both mounted in the computer? That is, I’d like to know if I will really become “free” of having to use diskettes, or if I will still have to use a system disk always in the Mac internal disk drive. Other option would be to emulate a hard disk, containing both the operating system and all the softwares. But do you know if this original 128k Mac can understand a hard disk emulated by the Floppy Emu? Thanks.

Steve July 27th, 2016
2:35 pm

You can boot a 128k from the Emu, but it can emulate only one drive at a time. If you want two, you’d have to use the internal floppy.

That’s right. You can also remove the emulated system disk after booting, and select a different software disk through the Emu’s menus, then the Mac will prompt you when you need to reinsert the original system disk. The Mac 128K doesn’t support the Floppy Emu’s hard disk mode: see “Macintosh Hard Disk” in the description above for the list of Mac models with the necessary hard disk support.

Vitor July 28th, 2016
5:46 am

Ok, thanks for your answer!

Ron V September 8th, 2016
6:01 pm

FANTASTIC!! I just got mine and just loaded up Hard Hat Mack and Lemonade Stand!!
Thanks so much for your quick shipment and awesome product!!!

Pat September 19th, 2016
6:43 am

Hi, i am fixing an old Hunter machine that seems to use powerpc and MAC floppy with unknown programm. i would like to ditch out the floppy drive to gain robustness on this machine because the floppys keep on breaking and the programm is becoming very rare and hard to find.
Is there a way to know if your unit could work. it uses a 3.5 sony floppy MP-F17W-10 which is meant for macs.
thanks for any help.

sorry, some explications are necessary
It is a car alignement machine, manufactured by Hunter. model is K111, it uses a strange powerpc inside the main tower of the machine or maybe an old mac, and uses raw software directly onto the floppy (maybe assembler)
I came to the conclusion that its mac based because of the floppy drive meant for mac’s.
thanks for any guidance to see if the sony floppy can be swaped over your unit, assuming i can read one of the disquette and make an image of it on the SD card.

Hi! I’ve purchased a Floppy Emu Model B just before I found that the default firmware is for Apple II. But I only have a Macintosh Classic. Since I noticed that “use the Apple II firmware only when connected to an Apple II computer. If a Floppy Emu Model A board running the Apple II firmware is connected to a Mac or Lisa, it may cause damage”. Is it OK if I connect Model B running Apple II firmware to my Macintosh Classic for firmware updating? Thanks! 😊

Chris M. September 24th, 2016
8:52 am

Pat,

That Hunter machine uses standard MFM PC floppy drives. There are many floppy emulators out there that support those drives such as the HxC and Gotek clones.

Yuancun Zhao, that warning only applies to the Model A, which has been discontinued. You can connect the Model B to your Macintosh Classic without worries, and install the Mac-compatible firmware.

Pat Allen September 25th, 2016
3:07 pm

Hi, i know at least 2 persons who did try with the gotek and they gave up after 10-12 month worth of work. What could realy go wrong with that ? i have many floppy drive from the same era, only the Sony one works on this machine. could it be that the machine recognise the drive in some way ?
otherwise it completely refuses to work.
thanks,

Roman September 28th, 2016
11:15 am

Hello! I bought it some times ago and it is working great! But there is one point: I did not see new files on the SD card. I copy file to the card on my macbook (mac os x 10.11) but then I connected the emu to apple ii I did not see some of them. It is not depending of format. For example I can see one DSK file and did not see another DSK file. Also PO and IMAGE format. What can be wrong?

Disk image files are displayed in the LCD menu if they’re compatible with the currently selected emulation mode and disk size. For example, 3.5 inch disk images won’t be displayed if the Emu is in 5.25 inch disk mode. The disk image file must also be in a supported format, with the expected file size and signature bytes for that format.

Roman September 29th, 2016
9:14 am

Thank you Steve! It\’s clear! But also i could not see some files what was at the card already. I get the emu with sd card, with software collection.

I’ve purchased a Floppy Emu Model B awhile back. I just got a chance and fired up the Apple ][. When I select Apple ][ from the menu then 5.25″ it lists no files in the directory listing.
When I load the SD card on my laptop all the files in that same directory list just fine anyone have an idea what I’m doing wrong?

You’ll need to install the Apple II-compatible firmware for the Emu, if you haven’t already. Disk image files are displayed in the LCD menu if they’re compatible with the currently selected emulation mode and disk size. For example, 3.5 inch disk images won’t be displayed if the Emu is in 5.25 inch disk mode. The disk image file must also be in a supported format, with the expected file size and signature bytes for that format. Please see the manual for details.

The Emu has an LCD screen and interface buttons built directly into the unit, rather than requiring a remote control gui. Please see the instruction manual and the video above for details and examples.

Ryan October 21st, 2016
5:29 pm

I was hoping for a way to connect it internally and controlling it remotely to keep a clean desktop space with the emulator board out of sight.

A new batch of Floppy Emu boards is already being made, and I expect to have them available by mid-November or earlier.

Ryan October 24th, 2016
9:41 pm

I was vague in my prior statement, I apologize. I am interested in buying a few of these for myself and friends. However, I am curious of the usability with SD cards like Verbatim FlashAir and Eyefi Wifi Lan. I am assuming since the cards themselves have the built in LAN and handle sending receiving within themselves, than the only issue is the floppy emu refreshing the display or supporting it without SD card corruption.

I’ve not tried an Eye-fi SD card myself, but yes I think you’re right. Assuming the computer isn’t actively writing to the disk image on the SD card, you should be able to update the contents and then press the Emu’s reset button to reload the directory. This would be equivalent to physically removing and replacing the SD card, which is already possible.

Rick October 25th, 2016
8:36 am

Thanks Steve, I can’t wait to get one for my IIGS!

Ryan October 28th, 2016
10:58 pm

Does the Floppy emu come with latest firmware already installed or should I update it after receiving?

It comes with the latest Apple II-compatible firmware already installed. For the Mac and Lisa, or for updates, there is a simple firmware update process. See section 4 of the manual for more info.

lou November 6th, 2016
8:33 pm

Got this device, and it works when plugged in, although it won’t read any file unless it is a .DSK file…which I have no clue how to create; nor the manual mention it. Also there is no mention about how to create an emulated disk drive image; since it is not on the manual either; and one of the features of this device is to act like an hard drive.

I have a bunch of files as sit files that I would like to transfer, but I can’t because the mac can’t see them…it would be really appreciated to get at least the barebone info about how to set up the software on the SD card to use this device.

Beside that; excellent work.

Steve Hammond November 6th, 2016
9:00 pm

Lou, the device is meant to act as a disk drive, so you need disk images on the SD card to make it work.

You can use CyderPress to create disk images for the SD card that can be read on the EMU.

Check out section 6.1 of the manual, which discusses working with disk images, and provides links to web sites where you can download them, as well as examples of software tools that can create/edit disk images. For the Macintosh you’ll primarily be looking at macintoshgarden.org for disk image downloads, and something like HFVExplorer or Mini vMac for creating or editing your own disk images. This applies to both floppy and hard disk images.

The “Vintage Software Collection SD Card” also includes a variety of different disk images for all supported platforms, including floppy and hard disk images, and is intended for people who just want an easy way to get started with some pre-existing disk images.

Stuffit (sit) files aren’t disk images, but are just compressed files (like a zip file). You can use one of the aforementioned tools to put the Stuffit file inside of a disk image, then mount the disk image on your Mac and you’ll see the Stuffit file along with the rest of the disk’s contents. Or you can uncompress the Stuffit file using a Macintosh emulator like Mini vMac, and then copy the uncompressed contents into a disk image for use with the Emu.

68kmla.org is a great resource if you have general questions about Macintosh retrocomputing tools and methods.

Gary Teichrow November 15th, 2016
5:23 pm

You just made my month! I’m now going to actually keep versus sell my Lisa. Thank you for all your hard work putting this together.

Ryan December 4th, 2016
5:01 pm

What is the correct terminology for the model B extension cable? I am looking to buy a shorter one but need to know the search term.

I changed emulation mode to “smartport” and now it is stuck on screen with “can’t find smart0.P0” Resetting won’t fix it!

Ryan December 9th, 2016
10:51 am

Nevermind, replaced sd card with correct layout. All is good.

DB December 22nd, 2016
7:23 am

Neat product! A good way to keep old computers still usable. Plan to get one at some point.

Johnny December 28th, 2016
1:21 pm

If and when you have a sale, i will get one! but even if you don’t, i’m still gonna consider getting one! This is an amazing thing because the floppy drives on my Macintosh Classic are failing, and I also want to update both of them to system 7.5.5.

techknight January 2nd, 2017
12:03 pm

Why is the B alot more expensive than the A? Cant we go back to the cheaper version?

I think you’re looking at the “closeout” price of the Model A, from when the remaining inventory was sold at a big discount. The Model B is the same price as the Model A + Universal Adapter pair that it replaces.

techknight January 7th, 2017
7:12 pm

Ah ok. Can we have the ability to switch between different HD20 images?

I’ve thousands of WORD and Excel files of my PhD thesis and later papers/articles, of the the period 1988/2000, on my Mac SE, mainly on external iomega Zip Drive Disks, and fewer files are as well stored in compressed state on the Mac SE Hard Disk (and compressing/decompressing functions of the initially used software still works fine as well as WORD and EXCEL, on my Mac SE).

I’ve recently bought your product through my courageous son in the States. Hope to find most or all of my files intact after all these years on the iomega disks. I run my Mac SE, it works fine. I loved this great machine and worked on it for about 12 years before I finally shifted to PC laptops running under Windows mainly due to the exaggerated huge prices that Apple Computers applies to it machines and I cannot afford anymore by the start of the 21st Century after I’ve had purchased my Apple IIgs and Mac SE after 28-26 years ago when I was resident in France and had a much higher income than in Egypt.

There was a problem of an electric spark produced when launching the Mac SE machine with the on/off button, however, the problem was fixed few days ago, i.e. by late Dec 2016, by a genuine local technician in Cairo, Egypt, who has changed the internal switch of the Mac SE on/off button.

Now, everything is ready to connect my Zip drive to see in what condition are my files on the iomega Zip drive disks. I wonder if I can connect your product and the iomega to my Mac SE at the same time before booting the Mac SE. Please, confirm that this type of double connection to the SCSI ports of Mac SE is possible at no risk. Thank you. My final goal it to transfer my file to a recent Mac (of a friend) and then to my recent PC laptop running under windows.

I think your product by all measures is a great one of its category, if not the unique, easy and useful one to use. I’m completely astonished that Apple Computer doesn’t make use of your product to help its old costumers recover their old files stored on vintage Macs to new Macs instead of simply saying to them that their old machines are obsolete/vintage and not covered by any service from Apple worldwide. A great manufacturer can never say such thing or proclaiming he is not responsible of his own old machines, this is a big shame and a unbelievable violent pity action to those who participated in building the wealth of Apple Computer at its early years.

Hopefully, there are great engineers, like you Sir, to save the aged folk, like me, and the World.

Was hoping to find people sharing their pimped out hard disk images. I long to return to the days when my Mac Plus had flying toasters, the “moose” and made a barfing noise when you ejected a disk… I know that if I search carefully, all that can be obtained separately but I have to believe that people have created hard disk images that probably do most if not more of that with games and apps to boot.

@ Mark Wolfe, for Macintosh software, most people just download everything they need from Macintosh Garden.

@Techknight, a note about the ability to switch between different HD20 images: I added that feature many months ago in firmware hd20-0.7F-F14.5, but I just discovered that I never updated the link on this page to point to the new firmware. Doh! It’s now updated.

Johnny February 12th, 2017
6:44 am

Hey, this thing is amazing. Great job! I have 2 old mac classic’s and I can’t wait to buy this!

Anonymous February 17th, 2017
6:56 am

I was wondering if you could make an adapter for 8din serial connections

A WiFi-enabled SD card like the Eye-Fi or Toshiba FlashAir should work, though I’ve never tried it myself.

The Emu is designed specifically for vintage Apple computer disk emulation (Macintosh, Apple II, and Lisa). For industrial equipment, you can probably use a PC-centric floppy disk emulator like HxC Floppy.

Willy February 25th, 2017
2:10 pm

Hi Steve,

I am trying to use the EMU floopy drive emulator to install Mac OS 7.5.3 on my Macintosh SE. Somehow the SE does not recognize 1.4 Mb disk images and wants me to reformat to 0.8 Mb. Is there a way to have the SE recognize the 1.4Mb disk images?

Apple introduced 1440K floppy support with the Mac SE FDHD and newer machines. If you have the original Mac SE, it will be limited to using 400K and 800K floppy disks and disk images. You could use the Emu in Hard Disk Mode with your SE, and load OS that way. Or stick with System 7.1, which comes on 800K floppies and which will probably be more usable on an SE anyway.

Hi Steve,
I\’am using the floppy Emu B with my Mac SE/30s. On one of them it\’s working without a problem. On the other one it is only working on the interanl floppy port. On the external port there is no reaction – no power no display. I think it\’s all ok with the Floppy Emu and the problem is on the mainboard? Any idea?
Thanks
Gerhard

If the external floppy port isn’t even getting power, then you have a damaged logic board. You could use a multimeter to trace the connections to the external port, and try to identify what’s broken. A repair service like http://maccaps.com/MacCaps/Repair_Service.html may also be able to help.

fouasson March 4th, 2017
4:31 am

Hello, i have a floppy emu version A with universal adapter for my apple iigs, all it was ok but this morning, the 2gs don’t boot on .2mg or .p , only boot with .dsk.
You you known the problem. I already try to put the firmware.
Thank

There’s no shipping during the weekend. Orders are batched and shipped every few days, and you’ll receive an email confirmation when it ships.

Johnny March 7th, 2017
5:40 pm

Oh ok. Mine just shipped thanks for telling me!

Chris March 8th, 2017
12:53 pm

Loving this Emu, it’s done absolute wonders for my old Macs. However, i’m stuck using the .IMG files that are pre-loaded as there seems to be few (if any) websites that offer the images as direct downloads (or atleast .IMG types that are already loaded). They all seem to be .SIT files which are nothing short of a pain in the bum to extract in Windows. Though I can do it and when you manage to, you are left with the files but still the problem of somehow putting them files onto a floppy image that are the same type that the Emu accepts and are pre-loaded.

The manual is a good start but I am still scratching my head as to how I can make some from the .SIT files you download (Eg. from Macintosh Garden), extracted or not. Is it possible in Windows 7? If so is there a tutorial on how because Google hasn’t given me a proper solution as of yet.

I don’t have a tutorial on Stuffit, sorry. Section 6.1 of the Emu manual has some suggestions for tools you can use to view and edit the contents of disk images, or make new disk images. There’s also some general info here on the use of StuffIt, Macintosh disk images, and their use in emulators that you may find useful: http://www.gryphel.com/c/image/

I try to avoid software that comes in a StuffIt archive, since as you’ve discovered it’s often a pain. Many items on Macintosh Garden are available in several different forms: as a StuffIt archive, as a set of disk images, etc. Check the list of download links and try to find one that’s a disk image. If you must convert a StuffIt archive, do it on a vintage Mac or a Mac emulator like Mini vMac. Uncompressing the stuffit archive on a Windows machine will lose the resource fork and type/creator signatures.

How to use this Floppy EMU to copy files of interest from the HD of Mac SE (that works well up to present day) to a new machine (e.g. Mac desktop/Mac laptop)? I have a wealth of old Word and Excel files that are stored since years on the HD of my old Mac SE (they are in good condition) and I need to transfer these files to a newer Mac (as a preliminary basic step before finally transferring them to a recent Windows laptop). The local Apple Macintosh vendor shops refused to do do that job for me. Thank you for reporting the required steps in some details (if possible without referring me to the EMU Instruction Manual that stays somewhat obscure for me). I understand that I must first insert the SD into the EMU, second I plug the EMU into the rear 19 pin slot of the Mac SE, third I’ll start the Mac SE. At this point, the Mac will turn on, and the EMU will work. What to do next in order to copy the files of interest from the HD of the Mac SE to the SD on the EMU? Is this to be done simply by dragging the files of interest to the SD of the EMU using the Mac SE Finder, or I’ve do something else? My son has bought the EMU complete (including the Floppy Emu Model B, the Frosted Ice Acrylic Case “assembled”, the Vintage Apple Software Collection SD Card, the Full-Size SD Adapter, and the Disk Extension Cable) and send that whole nice package (ready to be used) to me. However, I didn’t use that package yet.

I think it will be clearer once you have the hardware. Yes, you would copy the files to a blank disk image on the SD card. Then you would put the SD card in your Windows laptop, and use HFVExplorer (or one of the other tools described in section 6.1 of the manual) to open the disk image on the SD card and copy out the files. If you need general tutorials on using vintage Mac systems with emulators and disk images, vintage file format conversions, etc, I recommend asking for help in the discussion forums of enthusiast web sites like 68kmla.org and thinkclassic.org.

Johnny March 11th, 2017
11:22 am

Does the floppy emu have built-in Macintosh support or do you have to install the firmware after?

Please see step 1 of the quickstart guide included with the hardware, and section 4 of the manual for additional details. There’s one firmware that provides Apple II disk emulation, and a separate one that provides Mac and Lisa disk emulation.

Chase Clarkson March 14th, 2017
12:36 pm

Yesterday I got my Floppy Emu and I’ve got to say, it’s an AMAZING piece of tech, glad to have gotten my hands on one!. And good timing too, the day I got it, my Mac Plus’s internal drive kicked the bucket.

One question though, and it’s about the HD20 emulation mode. I can never seem to get it to work. On bootup, the Macintosh becomes unresponsive and the Emu seems to freeze up as well, though when changing the HD20 disk it works fine. But the Mac still would not boot from it, nor would it be mounted when I had a system disk in the floppy drive, it would just freeze once Finder loaded. I’ve tried updating the firmware on the Emu and have tried multiple different images for the HD20, all of which work in Mini vMac, so it’s not a unreadable disk.

The only thing upgraded to this Plus is 4MB of RAM and the Brainstorm Accelerator, seeing as it seems to work for other Plus users, I would assume the Accelerator has something to do with it, but I do not want to go inside and start removing the whole CPU to check.

Sadly it seems that compact Macintosh (Plus, SE) accelerators don’t play nicely with HD20 disks. If you scroll up in the comments, you’ll see another past report very similar to yours. Perhaps the HD20 routines in the Mac ROM used fixed delays that are affected by the accelerator – just a guess.

Chase Clarkson March 14th, 2017
1:38 pm

@Steve
Ah, alright, guess I’ll be looking into how to disable the accelerator, I’d rather sacrifice performance for HD20 emulation, and hopefully, the uninstall is easy enough if I ever need it again I can.

John March 18th, 2017
2:12 pm

Any chance you could combine the apple ii and mac modes into one super firmware? I use the device between many machines. Would be really handy! 😉

You may forgive me for my multiple questions before physically using the emu to transfer files from my Mac SE to another computer.

First: Should I use Ciderpress utility to create blank floppy (or blank HD) volume on the SD of the emu (using a Windows machine) before I insert the SD in the emu board that will be connected to the Mac SE, or the SD shipped with the emu board has already such blank volumes installed on it?

Second: I read somewhere in the instructions an alarm on running the emu board under the Apple II mode while the emu is inserted in a Mac machine (since this may damage the emu or the computer). Is this alarm not relevant to a “new emu”, i.e. the “new emu” will run smoothly with the Mac SE as if it has never been run with Apple II machine?

Third: I sincerely hope that you would have some free time to make a YouTube video that will show the users how to transfer files from the Mac to the emu SD. Your previous YouTube videos concentrate on running games or software on the Apple II or APPLE IIGS using the emu board.

1) There are some blank Mac disk images on SD card, and you can use HFV Explorer to create more if desired. Ciderpress is for Apple II disk images, HFV Explorer is for Mac disk images. Please see section 8 of the manual.
2) The warning you’re referring to is specific to the older Model A and does not apply to the Model B. You will need to download and install the alternate Mac firmware, as discussed in the manual.
3) Floppy Emu functions just like a real external disk drive, so you can copy files to/from it just as you would any other disk. If you haven’t yet actually used the hardware, please wait until you have. If you need general tutorials on vintage Mac usage, like how to copy a file, I recommend asking for help in the discussion forums of vintage Macintosh enthusiast web sites like 68kmla.org and thinkclassic.org. I can only provide support specific to the Emu hardware, sorry.

Johnny March 21st, 2017
4:27 pm

I have an iMac g3 from 2000 running mac os 9 and i also have disk copy installed on it. when I try to make a blank floppy disk image on disk copy, it works and i can transfer games and files onto the blank floppy disk image and then put them on the sd card. However, when i try to load that disk copy image off of the emu, it just says “file not contiguous”. Can you please help me?

John M Holmes Jr March 21st, 2017
4:32 pm

Easiest way to fix that is to copy all the files off of the card onto your computer, then erase the card, and copy the files back over there. That will put them in contiguous order. There may have been one in the middle that got deleted and another file went in and partially wrote over that space and then had to go to another area of the card to finish writing, thus it’s not contiguous.

Johnny March 21st, 2017
4:43 pm

Ok, i will try that, Thanks!

Johnny March 21st, 2017
6:10 pm

Ok, the problem was the contents of the disk image was in a folder and I needed to take all the programs out of the folder, then put them in the disk image. Sadly I was not able to get mini vmac working on my Macintosh Classic, because it requires 5mb of memory and the Classic only has 4mb. I knew that wasn’t gonna work……

Anonymous April 1st, 2017
5:51 am

I followed the instructions for the copying the two updating firmware files to the SD on my Windows laptop, and made the correct connection of the emu to the Mac SE and started the emu firmware update.

The first part of the firmware update run smoothly (and the LCD displayed “RESULT: SUCCESS”).

However, the the second part (by holding down the SELECT and PREV buttons, and pressing/releasing the RESET button) didn’t started the AVR microcontroller firmware update.

Instead the display of the LCD became permanently hanging at the display (wrong CPLD 14 ! = $).

I shut down Mac SE, and when launching it again the emu LCD was still hanging at that same wrong message.

I shut down to wait for kind help from your side as I do not know what should I do at this point.

Anonymous, if you give your name and email in the comment form, I can contact you directly to help. Your email isn’t displayed, only I will see it. It sounds like your bootloader isn’t starting when you hold PREV+SELECT and press and release RESET. Did you watch the video demo of the process steps? If it’s easier, you can also start the bootloader by holding PREV+SELECT while you first turn on the computer power, then you won’t have to bother with the RESET button.

Sorry that my message given just above appeared as Anonymous. Normally the concerned fields are filled when I open this emu site, but they disappeared this time when I submitted the previous message. Hope they appear now.

My error in the update was that I didn’t press the RESTART when still holding the PREV+SELECT pressed. Accordingly, I corrected that error and then the second part of the firmware update it worked fine, and to be sure I repeated the two updating parts and both worked fine.

I opened the blank 1440 K blank disk in the Mac folder but Mac said it is not recognized, so I opened the 800 k blank disk and the Mac accepted it.

I changed the name of that disk, and the new name appeared on Mac Finder, and I saved two files to that disk, and the two files appeared inside this disk in the Finder.

I shut down the Mac and get the SD card out from the emu board and inserted it into the Windows laptop.

I used the HFV_Explorer and went to the Mac blank disks. However, I find the 800 K blank disk as it was before doing any file copying to it.

I was all the time believing the blank disk will work as if it is a volume and I’ll find inside it the two copied files.

My ultimate target is to use the emu to get some files from the Mac and copy them into a new Mac via sending the copied files to my son in the USA using my Windows laptop as attached files.

Certainly, there is some gap my understanding of the correct procedure to follow in order to get the files of interest transferred using the emu SD and it blank disks. Am sure you have a solution for that.

Am keen eager to forward a package of deep thanks to Mr. Steve Chamberlin for his “floppy-emu-board” and to thank him much more for the kind help and answers he has delivered to my questions on his bigmesswires.com site about the use of that nice “emu board”. In addition, he was so kind to give several reply messages to my questions via email. It is time to say a great “THANK YOU” to this brilliant engineer who found and shared a great solution for a difficult problem facing the users of vintage Macintosh computers. Finally his kind continuous help and support have resulted in fully transferring two of my old files (20-27 years old) on my Mac SE to my Windows laptop, something which made their conversion to a modern Mac laptop and then to a modern Windows laptop (by my son on a new Mac laptop) possible. These two files now appear perfectly on my Windows laptop with all their original formatting and calculation functions as they were on my old Mac SE. This way, I can continue to make the same work for hundreds of my other old files stored since more than two decades on my Mac SE. For years, I was believing that my old Word and Excel files stored on my old Mac SE are dead and lost for ever as they cannot be recovered in anyway to a modern computer. Now, the solution is out therein. The transfer/conversion process needs patience but it is worth trying. For me, my old files are a real personal treasure as I used my Mac SE for >10 years as it was my unique computer between 1988 and 1998 (after one year of using Apple II-GS that was useless to me since it has never had MS-WORD and MS-Excel software applications). Thank you again Mr. Steve Chamberlin. You are simply great.

Chris Hamilton April 6th, 2017
7:55 pm

the Floppy Emu Deluxe Bundle with Snow White Case is currently out of stock. Will they become available again? I wish to order! 🙂

I’ve temporarily run out the Snow White case, but expect to have more in about a week. The Frosted Ice case is still available.

Chris Hamilton April 6th, 2017
8:36 pm

Ok Thanks! 🙂

John April 8th, 2017
2:21 pm

I’ve run into a bug with FloppyEmu. I am using it with the Apple IIe PDS card. When I try to connect as a 3.5 800K drive, Apple IIe startup locks up. I’ve tried numerous power cycling and other things. The only thing that works is going back to 5.25 floppy mode. Any ideas?

The Macintosh LC Apple IIe PDS card isn’t officially supported, sorry. See the compatibility table above for details on supported computers and emulation modes. However, the Floppy Emu should function the same with the IIe PDS card as with a regular Apple IIe, in 5.25 inch floppy emulation mode. Smartport hard disk mode may also work, though I’ve never tried it myself (see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRbNz5iL6UI). For 3.5 inch disks, the IIe PDS card requires a Unidisk 3.5 drive (A2M2053), but Floppy Emu emulates the Apple 3.5 Drive (A9M0106) commonly used with the Apple IIgs and IIc+.

A fantastic device and a great contribution to retro-Apple freaks. Highly recommend it. While I miss the click and whir (and scary sounds) of the Disk ][, this is a definite upgrade from them. No more degrading floppy disks and no more finding places to store them.

Thanks for this. I was looking on how to do something similar with Arduino and/or run the disk drive from a PC or Arduino. The $139 bundle should let me do what I need…even copy images to the real FDD on the Apple //e. Worth it in time saved.

Robert May 25th, 2017
12:09 pm

Hello, I don’t see several disk images in floppy emu. When I drag and drop new .image file to SD card Macintosh folder, it doesn’t appear in the list neither. How can I make my .image file visible and readible by FDDemu?
Regards, Robert

What type of disk images are they? “.image” could mean a lot of different things. If they are DiskCopy 6.3 images, they won’t work – see the explanation in the instruction manual. The Floppy Emu LCD display will only show disk image files of types that it knows how to use.

Suggestion… On the instructions consider putting a little flow chart in there so customers can more quickly understand if Apple // – good to go … Mac or Lisa – must do a little software assembly…

Also.. I have a use case that needs some expert help. On a 1 or drive Mac.. what is the most effective way to transfer the contents of dozens of 400 and 800k disks to the SD card? Is there a utility on the Vintage Apple SD card that will emulate a hard disk? On a SE II the best I can do is create a new boot floppy and use the blank 800k SD card to copy one disk a time.. then copy the contents on another machine. Of course I have to reboot the Mac along the way.

Feature Request: Allow naming the smartport files with “SMART#” as the prefix rather than the whole filename (not counting extension). Use case: in an emulator like Virtual II you can mount “Games.2mg” and “Utilities.2mg”, but when you copy that to your SD card you need to rename them “smart0.2mg” and “smart1.2mg”… and then try and remember which is which if you later try and sync the images. If the files could be named “smart0 – Games.2mg” and “smart1 – Utilities.2mg” that’d be swell. Regardless, keep up the awesome!

William Bonner August 11th, 2017
9:52 pm

Great Website! So easy to navigate, well laid out. You’re the best, thanks for adding the Liron Support! 😀

john hill August 22nd, 2017
8:39 pm

Hi
Will it work with this
performa 580cd specs

The Apple Macintosh Performa 580CD features a 33 MHz 68LC040 processor, 5 MB or 8 MB of RAM, either a 250 MB or 500 MB hard drive, and a 2X CD-ROM drive in a relatively compact all-in-one case with a 14″ color display.
regards
john hill

stynx September 21st, 2017
11:21 am

Is the vTech/Laser Universal Disk Controller (UDC) supported? I have read that the UDC supports smart port devices like the Chinook smart port HD (20mb). I have 3 cards (2 with ASIC and one TTL) and I am willing to lend one card for testing. I have only seem smart port support mentioned together with the ASIC based design.